Today, we’re excited to announce unlimited access to Amazon Virtual Private Cloud (Amazon VPC) – a secure and seamless bridge between a company’s existing IT infrastructure and the AWS cloud. Since August 2009, Amazon VPC has been in a limited beta, during which we’ve selectively granted access. Starting today, all current and future Amazon EC2 customer accounts are enabled to use Amazon VPC, but customers will not be charged for Amazon VPC until they begin using it. Amazon VPC enables enterprises to connect their existing infrastructure to a set of isolated AWS compute resources via a Virtual Private Network (VPN) connection, and to extend their existing management capabilities such as security services, firewalls, and intrusion detection systems to include their AWS resources. To get started with the service, please visit the Amazon VPC detail page.
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Tuesday, December 15, 2009
Amazon Virtual Private Cloud Enters Unlimited Beta
Amazon Virtual Private Cloud Enters Unlimited Beta: "
App Engine SDK 1.3.0 Released Including Support for Larger User Uploads
App Engine SDK 1.3.0 Released Including Support for Larger User Uploads: "Today, we've very excited to release version 1.3.0 of the App Engine SDK, now available to both Java and Python developers. The newest SDK includes a new experimental Blobstore API for storage of files up to 50MB.
Store and Serve - Files can be uploaded and stored as blobs, to be served later in response to user requests. Developers can build their own organizational structures and access controls on top of blobs.
Pricing and Quotas - We include blob storage and transfer under the same datastore pricing and quotas you're already familiar with. For more information, see the App Engine quotas page.
The new Blobstore API is now available in both App Engine SDKs for local development. At this time it can only be used by applications that have enabled billing. There's a lot more information about the API and how it works in the Blobstore documentation (Python, Java) so please check that out and post any questions to the groups.
This release also includes some performance tweaks to the Java runtime. For example, we've sped up many reflective operations by up to 10x resulting in improvements on the order of 10% for applications based on dynamic languages. As always, there are a few other minor changes and bug fixes in this release, so make sure to read our release notes (Python, Java).
Store and Serve - Files can be uploaded and stored as blobs, to be served later in response to user requests. Developers can build their own organizational structures and access controls on top of blobs.
Pricing and Quotas - We include blob storage and transfer under the same datastore pricing and quotas you're already familiar with. For more information, see the App Engine quotas page.
The new Blobstore API is now available in both App Engine SDKs for local development. At this time it can only be used by applications that have enabled billing. There's a lot more information about the API and how it works in the Blobstore documentation (Python, Java) so please check that out and post any questions to the groups.
This release also includes some performance tweaks to the Java runtime. For example, we've sped up many reflective operations by up to 10x resulting in improvements on the order of 10% for applications based on dynamic languages. As always, there are a few other minor changes and bug fixes in this release, so make sure to read our release notes (Python, Java).
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